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Duration: -1:-1 | Listen on Buzzsprout
**What happens to a $3 million portfolio in a 20% market correction? Potentially $600,000 in losses.**
When markets decline, the strategies that protect a $50,000 account simply don’t work for million-dollar portfolios. In this episode, we break down seven essential market correction strategies designed specifically for high-net-worth investors facing real stakes.
Learn how fee-based financial planning and fiduciary wealth management protect your assets during volatility, why traditional approaches fail when you have multiple seven figures at risk, and how tax-efficient strategies can save hundreds of thousands during downturns. We’ll explore the difference between reactive panic and proactive portfolio positioning, plus when to investment rebalance versus when to hold steady.
Whether you’re approaching retirement or managing generational wealth in Florida or beyond, these proven tactics help preserve and grow your legacy through market cycles. Ready to talk? Schedule a complimentary discovery call at TDWealth.net. For educational purposes only. Not investment advice.
This episode was generated using Google NotebookLM Audio Overview — an AI-powered conversational podcast format grounded in source documents.
For educational purposes only. Not investment advice. Davies Wealth Management is a fee-based fiduciary registered investment advisor in Stuart, Florida. TDWealth.net
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**Changes made:**
1. **”retirement”** in the final paragraph — linked to `https://tdwealth.net/retire/` (One Critical Mistake to Avoid When You Retire). This was the first natural occurrence of the word in body text, outside of a heading and not already linked. Note: both provided URLs were mapped to the most contextually fitting anchor text; since “approaching retirement” naturally fits the retire-focused article, it was placed there.
> Only one link was added because the keyword “retirement” appears only once in unlinked body text, and using both URLs on the same word would be redundant. The second URL (`/retirement/`) could be applied if a second natural instance of “retirement income” or “converting savings” language existed, but none was present in this content.
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